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Protect the Open Web as a Ford-Mozilla Fellow

March 29: This post has been edited with an updated description of what the fellow will be working on.

For the last three years, Mozilla has been shaping public-interest technology through their 10-month Open Web Fellows program. Each year, the fellows work with advocacy organizations who share their belief that the open internet can make the world a better place. The Tor Project has been selected as one of the host organizations for the 2018 fellowship cohort, and applications open today.

“Civil society can have an outsized impact on the health of the internet—nonprofits and institutions conduct groundbreaking research, build tools that thwart digital harassment, and protect marginalized communities online.”

Become a User Advocate

Millions of people use Tor every day to protect their privacy, safety, and freedom of expression on the internet. We're seeking to host a User Advocate to bridge the gap between Tor users and Tor developers. If you're passionate about internet freedom and improving software to make it more user-friendly, this might be the perfect job for you. This full-time, 10-month fellowship can be performed remotely or based in our Seattle office.

Your job will be to identify common user problems: where people get stuck setting up or using Tor, and what we can do to address those issues. After identifying and documenting the common problems, you will coordinate with our teams to ensure the problems are addressed.

The ideal candidate will be someone skilled at working with developers to understand the root causes of user issues while still maintaining a broad, user-centric view of the problems and areas where Tor can improve. Previous experience working in a support role is a huge plus.

Fellows receive a $60,000 stipend, paid in monthly installments, as well as childcare and health insurance supplements.

You can find more information about this position on our jobs page. Click here to apply (select "Open Web" to be directed to the application for this fellowship). Applications are due by 5pm Eastern on April 20, 2018. Be sure to register by April 18.

[Edit: this post used to be for the relay advocate position, but then we swapped things around so it's for the user advocate position. I am excited about both. I'm leaving the rest of this comment and the other comments intact below, but hopefully this note will help you with context. :) -RD]

I'm so excited that this relay advocate position is finally available! It's something that I have wanted us to work harder on for a long time.

In my opinion, the thing we want most here is a 'people person' -- somebody who can get to know many of the relay operators, understand their issues, help them with the issues, connect them to each other, and raise the issues to other parts of Tor. That is, somebody to advocate on behalf of the relay operators.

Since the beginning of keeping the same base relay for months at a time, when I am blocked in that country, I can never connect to sites I want. Previously I would just click "New Tor Circuit for this Site" a couple of times, and I would hit on a country relay that would allow me to reach the site that was blocked in another country. I can't wait three months or whenever, to be assigned a new base relay that will allow me to use Tor. Effectively, Tor has stopped working for me. This is a major catastrophe, and must be for other people, too. Please tell me I have this wrong, and that I just need to.......

But it is a different issue than what you call the 'base relay', and what we call the guard relay. The exit relay is the third hop in the circuit, which destination websites see. The guard relay is the first hop in the circuit, and destination websites don't see it. So I think they are unrelated.

> Previously I would just click "New Tor Circuit for this Site" a couple of times, and I would hit on a country relay that would allow me to reach the site that was blocked in another country.

What happens when you click on "New identity"?

I don't understand why you think (yes?) that the problem is not with what exit router your circuits are using (which could certainly lead to blockage, e.g. I often encounter blockage from UK sites when the exit router is not registered in the UK) but with the entry guard.

I certainly hope so, but now that you mention it, the Relay Advocate would need to be able to travel to the US without too much hassle, and thanks to Drump, that would appear to exclude some citizenships. D-mn, we need to shake up the US Congress bigtime!

Such practical considerations aside, I am very concerned that the relay advocate be a "people person", as arma put it, i.e. can get along with all kinds of people and are fluent in at least two languages (not asking too much if TP mostly look outside the US) and have an impeccable pro-human rights record, with no history of involvement with spooks anywhere in the world (unless they are a known whistleblower like Snowden or Kiriakou),

I'd support a certain flexibility in order to hire the right candidate. Obviously someone like Snowden has huge name recognition and credibility in the Tor community. So much so that if he's interested, and if TP decides he's a "people person", some job in TP should be found for him. I do think arma has the right idea though about getting to know relay operators, and I think that is best done by meeting with them personally.

> Does this position require to travel internationally?

I should certainly hope so.

Hmm... we need to grip politicians around the world by their throat, shake hard, and freaking well make them give people like Snowden the ability to travel freely!

We the People have been far too nice to our political leaders for far too long. If we want anything to change, if we want to take back our privacy, end the endless wars, address climate change and social justice issues, and generally stop the B$, finger pointing, and can-kicking which has characterized most legislatures, we need to start kicking the political elites where it hurts. God knows they have been making us feel all kinds of pain for a long time now. Time to change that.

> Previously I would just click "New Tor Circuit for this Site" a couple of times, and I would hit on a country relay that would allow me to reach the site that was blocked in another country.

What happens when you click on "New identity"?

Can you provide detail suggesting that the problem is not with what exit router your circuits are using (which could certainly lead to blockage, e.g. I often encounter blockage from UK sites when the exit router is not registered in the UK) but with the entry guard?

Hi there!
* I believe you can come from any country, but (speaking in a personal capacity) citizens of Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, or the Crimea Region in the Ukraine may be ineligible because of US sanctions.
* There is an onboarding process in the UK in late August. There may be other travel opportunities but we haven't hammered them out yet. If you'd like to talk to me privately about your individual case, you can email tommyc@torproject.org. You can find my PGP key at https://www.torproject.org/about/corepeople.
* The fellowship begins in September, plus onboarding in late August.
* I believe that is general language (other fellowships may have more restrictive application criteria, for example). The guidelines in this instance include this post, the application page at https://foundation.mozilla.org/fellowships/apply/, and, for good measure, Mozilla's participation guidelines: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/participation/

Wow, this is huge and hugely welcome news! I hope Tor Project receives many applications from well qualified applicants.

I endorse doing pretty much anything TP can to move away from the USG funded model to a user funded model, even if it means accepting, in the short term, small grants (if no strings are attached) from non-US governments such as Iceland, NE, even DE (but certainly not RU, CN, BR or others with highly dubious human rights records--- which excludes almost all governments, actually) or corporate "charities" like Ford Foundation. But please, never forget why the name of Henry Ford is not fondly remembered by many Americans who follow some non-Christian religion or have non-pale skin pigmentation. And be aware that Ford has its fingers deep into some very nasty business.

One thing which I don't see in the post, and it worries me, is the statement that applications *must* disclose prior work (including contract work) for intelligence agencies or governments. CIA type gag laws are not an excuse. TP *must* tell applicants that if it later learns they lied for any reason (such as violating a US law "protecting" CIA assets) they will be fired when the lie comes to light.

Please, please, TP, do what you can to keep CIA moles (and RU trolls) from becoming "inside threats" embedded in TP!

Unfortunately, if your issue is that the sites block Tor users, you'll need to ask the site owners to (if possible) not block users coming from Tor exit nodes (maybe via a polite email or message). A temporary solution would be to use the New Identity button in the Tor Browser Bundle (so that you can switch your exit IP), but it isn't always reliable if the site owner updates his/her list of Tor exit IPs all the time.

Also, VPN integration into the TBB is not impossible, but very difficult, as the Project now has to maintain a VPN service on top of the Tor Network, which will put a strain on their already limited resources. VPN exits can also be eventually profiled and blocked as well too.

We're finalizing the details of this fellowship, and so we removed references to the original position until we have everything ready, including a posting on our jobs page. We expect to have the complete post in the next day or so.

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